{¶ 2} In bringing the instant action, relator sought the issuance of an order under which respondents would be required to deduct additional jail-time credit from his criminal sentence. In support of his prayer for relief, relator alleged that, at the time his conviction was rendered in December 2001, the Lorain County Court of Common Pleas did not give him full credit for the days he had spent in the county jail while the criminal case was pending. He further alleged that, although he was able to obtain documents from the Lorain County Sheriff indicating that he was entitled to an additional credit, the Lorain County trial court overruled two separate motions to correct the supposed error in the calculation of his credit. Furthermore, relator asserted that the Ohio Adult Parole Authority also rejected his requests to have additional days deducted from his two-year sentence.
{¶ 3} In now moving for summary judgment, respondents submit that the "credit" issue has become moot because, approximately nine days after relator filed the instant action, he was released from incarceration on the basis that he had completed his jail term. In support of their argument, respondents have attached to their motion copies of three prison documents concerning the calculation of relator's release date. They have also attached the affidavit of Darnese Oliver, the Records Supervisor of the Lake Erie Correctional Institution. In her affidavit, Oliver avers that the attached copies are true and accurate duplications of the original documents in her possession.
{¶ 4} In reviewing appeals in which a criminal defendant has sought to contest the trial court's calculation of his jail-time credit, the courts of this state have concluded that the merits of that issue become moot once the defendant has been released from prison. In State v. Berger (1984),
{¶ 5} The foregoing basic logic has been applied in mandamus actions in which the defendant/relator has tried to compel the deduction of additional credit from his jail term. In State exrel. Rodgers v. Saffold (Oct. 8, 1998), 8th Dist. No. 74520,
{¶ 6} In the instant case, relator never filed a response to respondents' motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, he has not attempted to challenge the facts as set forth in respondents' evidentiary materials. Those materials readily show that relator was released from the Lake Erie Correctional Institution on December 3, 2003, only nine days after bringing this case. Thus, pursuant to the Rodgers precedent, the merits of relator's mandamus claim are now moot.
{¶ 7} Under Civ.R. 56(C), the moving party in a summary judgment exercise is entitled to prevail when he can establish that: (1) there are no genuine factual disputes remaining to be litigated; (2) he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law; and (3) the evidentiary materials are such that, even when those materials are interpreted in a way which is most favorable to the non-moving party, a reasonable person could only come to a conclusion adverse to the non-moving party. Welco Industries,Inc. v. Applied Cos. (1983),
{¶ 8} Consistent with the foregoing discussion, respondents' motion for summary judgment is granted. It is the order of this court that the writ is denied, and judgment is hereby entered in favor of respondents as to relator's entire mandamus claim.
Ford, P.J., Grendell and Rice, JJ., concur.
